fifteeneightyfour
RSSAcademic Perspectives from Cambridge University Press.
The Two Zolas
Émile Zola’s Le Rêve—The Dream, in English—appeared in book form in October 1888. It was a strikingly slender novel, by Zola’s standards-the shortest of the twenty volumes that would make up his epic series about the R…
Antifascism(s) in Latin America and the Caribbean: From the Margins to the Center.
Why is our edited volume devoted exclusively to Latin America and the Caribbean, some might ask. After all, antifascism was born in Europe, and many scholars regard this continent as the main arena where it developed. They also have described …
Forgotten Rebels: What the Virgin Islands and Guadeloupe Tell Us About Decolonisation
In today’s world of nation states, conventional narratives present decolonisation as an inevitable transition from empire to national independence. However, this does not fully acknowledge the complex, ongoing nature of decolonisation. What about th…
British expatriates of the informal empire: social mobility and sexuality in the Middle East
Historical rags to riches stories attract intrinsic interest. Nineteenth century social history is populated by men (mostly) driven by the self-improvement ethos who emerged from humble circumstances to relative wealth and status. They make pe…
What we forget when we remember the International Brigades
Historians of war often pride themselves on telling ‘forgotten stories’ on the basis of ‘lost voices’ from the past, and rightly so. Those dedicated to the International Brigades would, however, have a hard time getting these buzz …
Uncovering the linguistic rules at play in internet memes
During the 2022 Oscars ceremony, actor Will Smith famously walked onto the stage and slapped presenter Chris Rock across the face, in response to a joke about the former’s wife. Pictures of the slap soon went viral and entered meme lore, with people…
The Carbon Bargain: Gulf Rentierism in the Age of Climate Reckoning
What happens when a state is not just funded by carbon—but fundamentally formed by it? In the hydrocarbon-rich monarchies of the Gulf, energy has never been a mere commodity. It has served as the scaffolding of sovereignty, development, and modern s…
From First Job to Career: Why Your First Job Doesn’t Have to Define You
What was your very first “real” job? Maybe it came after high school or college, or maybe it came long before that. Maybe it aligned with your academic degree or credentials exactly, or, perhaps, it looked nothing like the work for which you t…
What Did Ladies-in-Waiting Do All Day?
One of my favorites children’s books was What Do People Do All Day? by Richard Scarry. Repeatedly, I learned how the Busytown tailors, construction workers, and lumbermill employees lived their daily lives. I think this clarifies why my main questio…
Of Invented Languages
Esperanto, Klingon, Na’vi … these are examples of invented or constructed languages (conlangs for short). Unlike ‘natural’ languages such as English, Swahili, or Navajo, which arise and change organically, conlangs are consciously…
Cambridge Core
RSSAdvancing learning, knowledge and research.
Muses – the arts blog from BJPsych International
Author: Dr Tim McInerny, Pictures Editor, BJPsych International [tmcinerny@hotmail.com] In the August 25 edition of Muses – the arts blog from BJPsych International – Dr Tim McInerny, Pictures Editor, BJPsych International, introduces Coli…
Counting what matters: The role of sex-disaggregated data and gender statistics in social policy
See related Call for Papers in Data & Policy (deadline: 9 January 2026) In 2022, UN Women estimated that it would take 22 years to close the gender data gap to adequately assess the implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).&hellip…
Rethinking Biodiversity: Beyond Disturbance
Can humans increase biodiversity through their environmental practices? A new Perspective in Environmental Conservation answers with a bold: Yes. In “A biocultural hypothesis of human–environment mediations and biodiversity increase”,…
Directing conservation efforts for the ʻuaʻu – timing matters
The latest Paper of the Month for Bird Conservation International is Differences in breeding phenology between two geographically separated populations of the ʻuaʻu (Hawaiian Petrel Pterodroma sandwichensis) and is freely available for one month…
Elements in Race in American Literature and Culture
Elements in Race in American Literature and Culture aims to extend our understanding of the critical role race has played in shaping US literary history.…
Why Care About Culture When the World Is on Fire?
With the world facing war, climate change, pandemics, and civil unrest, it’s natural to question the importance of preserving culture. Why should we care about archaeology, monuments, traditions, art, and architecture when survival itself is threate…
Flow: The Editors’ Insights 2025
Members of the Flow Editorial Board have each selected one recent article to highlight as an example of the best and brightest being published in the journal.
Meet the Editors: Q&A with Mercedes Didier Garnham, Social Media Editor for Parasitology
Welcome to our “Meet the Editors” series, where we interview the editorial team about their work and their relationship to the journal. In this post we meet Mercedes Didier Garnham, Social Media Editor for Parasitology.
How a digital, solution-focussed tool (DIALOG+) helped lay counsellors improve mental healthcare in Pakistan
The RCPsych Article of the Month for August is ‘Feasibility and acceptability of a solution-focused approach to strengthen lay counselling for common mental disorders (DIALOG+) in Pakistan: mixed methods study‘, written by authors Saniya Salee…
Call for New Co-Editor for Social Policy and Society
Social Policy and Society (SPS) is a long-established international journal, published by Cambridge University Press and sponsored by the Social Policy Association (SPA).…